Valtteri Bottas made a great start to take pole position off Max Verstappen after winning the Brazilian sprint qualifying race. Yet the star performer was Lewis Hamilton who was rapid in the Mercedes. From last to fifth position.
At the start, Bottas’s soft tyres appeared to give him considerably better grip off the line, as he powered alongside Verstappen despite appearing to react slightly slower to the five red lights going out.
Valtteri was alongside the polesitter at the apex of Turn 1 and moved ahead, as Verstappen quickly came under pressure from Carlos Sainz, who was also on the softs for the start and used them to pass Sergio Perez for third position at Turn 1.
Sainz was all over Verstappen down the second straight and at the Turn 4 right at the end the pair went side by side, with the latter having to go off track and rejoined behind the Ferrari, Verstappen hitting the kerbs at the edge of the runoff hard as he did so, kicking up a plume of dirt.
But he was able to chase after Sainz as Bottas moved clear in the lead, shadowing the Ferrari for a few laps before using DRS to move back into second with an easy move to the inside of the first corner at the start of the fourth tour of 24.
Verstappen chased after Bottas, setting a string of fastest laps as he closed the Mercedes driver’s lead, which had at one stage with Sainz behind reached 2.5 seconds, to under two seconds as they quickly raced clear of the Ferrari – the leading pair the only drivers able to lap in the one minute, 12 seconds bracket.
The Red Bull driver continued to chip away at Bottas’s advantage as the race went on, getting within DRS range by the start of lap 15.
But he was unable to get much closer over the next couple of laps and dropped back beyond one-second adrift as Red Bull told him to “bide your time”.
Heading into the final tours, which featured heavy clouds building up behind Turn 4, Verstappen did surge back to briefly run within the DRS range, but he never got close enough to make a move and he finished 1.1 seconds adrift, as Bottas claimed his second Formula 1 sprint race win of the season.
Bottas will therefore start Sunday’s main race from pole ahead of Verstappen – the reverse of how they lined up in this event.
In third, Sainz fended off the attentions of Perez for the rest of the event, coming home 18.7 seconds behind Bottas.
In the pack behind, Hamilton, on the medium tyres, gained five places on the first lap alone, with the world champion immediately getting into P14 at the start of the second lap.
He made steadier progress from there, using DRS to dispatch AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and then passing Antonio Giovinazzi and Fernando Alonso to reach the edge of the top ten by the start of lap nine.
But with Daniel Ricciardo running ahead in tenth, much as was the case for Bottas in last Sunday’s Mexico City race, Hamilton struggled to pass the customer Mercedes-engine-running McLaren.
At the end of lap 12, Hamilton got close enough to Ricciardo to close in with DRS and steam ahead on the outside line to Turn 1 at the start of the next lap, quickly pulling clear to chase Sebastian Vettel’s Aston Martin in ninth position.
After a couple of laps trailing Vettel, Hamilton powered by in near identical fashion to his pass on Ricciardo and then easily raced by Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly on the grid hatchings in successive laps to reach seventh place at the start of the 17th lap.
From there he had a few laps in clear air closing the gap to Charles Leclerc, unlike Sainz the second Ferrari driver was running the mediums, with Hamilton reaching the one minute, 12 seconds just as far ahead the leaders had slipped back to the one minute, 13 seconds.
At the start of lap 20 Hamilton was right with Leclerc, using DRS to blast by on the inside line into Turn 4 to rise to sixth and head off after Lando Norris, who had earlier muscled his way past Leclerc on his rise from seventh on the grid.
Hamilton roared up to his countryman’s rear over as the final laps ticked down, eventually seizing fifth with a bold lap move to Norris’s inside at the start of the final lap.
He eventually finished just 20.8 seconds behind Bottas, with Norris, Leclerc, Gasly, Ocon and Vettel completing the top ten in the order Hamilton had passed them.
Hamilton will start P10 for Sunday’s Sao Paulo Grand Prix as a result of his grid penalty for taking a new internal combustion engine for this event.
The only incident of note concerned the two Alfa Romeo drivers, who collided at the Turn 1 apex at the start of the race’s second lap, after they had gone either side of Alonso (who finished P12) in an early scrap over P11.
Raikkonen locked up as he swung towards Giovinazzi on the inside of the right-hander, with the Italian’s right-front touching his teammate’s left-rear and spinning him around and into the runoff at the edge of the track.
Over the rest of the race, Raikkonen recovered two spots to beat the Haas drivers to P18.
So an entertaining sprint qualifying race, helped by Lewis Hamilton getting disqualified over a DRS technical issue following Friday’s qualifying, by starting last and making amazing progress.
As for his Mercedes teammate, Valtteri Bottas did a superb job to jump Max Verstappen at the start and held off the championship leader to win pole position.
Sprint race results:
1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 29:09.559
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Honda 1.170
3 Carlos Sainz Jr. Ferrari 18.723
4 Sergio Perez Red Bull-Honda 19.787
5 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 20.872
6 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes 22.558
7 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 25.056
8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri-Honda 34.158
9 Esteban Ocon Alpine-Renault 34.632
10 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin-Mercedes 34.867
11 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren-Mercedes 35.869
12 Fernando Alonso Alpine-Renault 36.578
13 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo-Ferrari 41.880
14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Mercedes 44.037
15 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri-Honda 46.150
16 Nicholas Latifi Williams-Mercedes 46.760
17 George Russell Williams-Mercedes 47.739
18 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo-Ferrari 50.014
19 Mick Schumacher Haas-Ferrari 1:01.680
20 Nikita Mazepin Haas-Ferrari 1:07.474




















